---
title: KeyboardControls
sourcecode: src/web/KeyboardControls.tsx
---

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<Grid cols={4}>
  <li>
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</Grid>

A rudimentary keyboard controller which distributes your defined data-model to the `useKeyboard` hook. It's a rather simple way to get started with keyboard input.

```tsx
type KeyboardControlsState<T extends string = string> = { [K in T]: boolean }

type KeyboardControlsEntry<T extends string = string> = {
  /** Name of the action */
  name: T
  /** The keys that define it, you can use either event.key, or event.code */
  keys: string[]
  /** If the event receives the keyup event, true by default */
  up?: boolean
}

type KeyboardControlsProps = {
  /** A map of named keys */
  map: KeyboardControlsEntry[]
  /** All children will be able to useKeyboardControls */
  children: React.ReactNode
  /** Optional onchange event */
  onChange: (name: string, pressed: boolean, state: KeyboardControlsState) => void
  /** Optional event source */
  domElement?: HTMLElement
}
```

You start by wrapping your app, or scene, into `<KeyboardControls>`.

```tsx
enum Controls {
  forward = 'forward',
  back = 'back',
  left = 'left',
  right = 'right',
  jump = 'jump',
}
function App() {
  const map = useMemo<KeyboardControlsEntry<Controls>[]>(()=>[
    { name: Controls.forward, keys: ['ArrowUp', 'KeyW'] },
    { name: Controls.back, keys: ['ArrowDown', 'KeyS'] },
    { name: Controls.left, keys: ['ArrowLeft', 'KeyA'] },
    { name: Controls.right, keys: ['ArrowRight', 'KeyD'] },
    { name: Controls.jump, keys: ['Space'] },
  ], [])
  return (
    <KeyboardControls map={map}>
      <App />
    </KeyboardControls>
```

You can either respond to input reactively, it uses zustand (with the `subscribeWithSelector` middleware) so all the rules apply:

```tsx
function Foo() {
  const forwardPressed = useKeyboardControls<Controls>(state => state.forward)
```

Or transiently, either by `subscribe`, which is a function which returns a function to unsubscribe, so you can pair it with useEffect for cleanup, or `get`, which fetches fresh state non-reactively.

```tsx
function Foo() {
  const [sub, get] = useKeyboardControls<Controls>()

  useEffect(() => {
    return sub(
      (state) => state.forward,
      (pressed) => {
        console.log('forward', pressed)
      }
    )
  }, [])

  useFrame(() => {
    // Fetch fresh data from store
    const pressed = get().back
  })
}
```
